Les Tucker
The author. Or for certain cases, the librarian.
The reference librarian finds where books of a particular subject, author or the actual book is shelved in the library in which he or she works.
A librarian looks after and lends book
Janet R. Andrew has written: 'Non-book materials and the librarian'
The librarian answered my question about the book.
Talk to a reference librarian. Perhaps there is some clue you can tell a librarian that will help you find your book. The author, the subject, the year of publication may help. There are also reference books that help based on your reading tastes so if you say the book had dragons and it was sort of like a book I read by Anne McCaffrey but it wasn't her, the librarian might be able to compare it to similar books and you could find it. But it is not a certainty.
Nympho - album - was created on 2005-07-04.
Dragon
A book worm
No, the word 'librarian' is a noun, a word for a person. A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. The pronouns that take the place of the noun 'librarian' is he or she as a subject, and him or her as an object. Examples: Ask the librarian if she knows the author's name. The librarian said that he would look it up for me. The librarian said the book was late, so I paid him the late fee.
ask a librarian or a teacher
Go to your local library and ask for the Reference Desk; any librarian on duty there will be more than happy to point you to the Book Review Digest for 1968. In this wonderful resource you will very likely be able to locate your book either by author or title, and there will be lists of publications, with the date and page number, on which your book was reviewed. If not, return to the librarian who will gladly help you pursue other sources for a review of your book.